$bbtitle
Apple Stock: 222.2499 ( -2.4001 )
RSS RSS Twitter Twitter
Search:
AppleInsider.com Archives News Bytes Reviews Anonymous Mailer Submit Story AppleInsider Forums Mac Prices Polls Advertise on AppleInsider Contact AppleInsider
Save over $300 on MacBook Pros and $150 on iMacs with special coupons: Mac Pricing Guide updated March 19th (Find the best prices on Macs).
Share
Friday, April 4, 2008

Exploring Time Capsule: feature and suitability review [Page 1]

By Prince McLean

Published: 11:00 AM EST

Time Capsule expands the wireless base station into a file and printer sharing solution and Time Machine target. This segment, the last of six exploring Time Capsule in depth, provides a review of its features and limitations as a wireless file sharing and backup appliance, along with comparisons to alternative products and previous AirPort models.

Previous articles from our in-depth Time Capsule review series:

Exploring Time Capsule: Time Machine over the Network vs USB
Exploring Time Capsule: 10/100/1000 Ethernet vs. 802.11g/n Wireless Networking
Exploring Time Capsule: WiFi 802.11n and the 5GHz band
Exploring Time Capsule: theoretical speed vs practical throughput
Exploring Time Capsule: how it fits into Apple's AirPort family
An in-depth review of Apple's 802.11n AirPort Extreme Base Station
Apple Time Capsule unboxing and preview
A Look Inside Apple's New Time Capsule
Answers to Time Capsule reader questions

The AirPort Family (Snap, Snap)

Based on our testing, Time Capsule is almost functionally identical to the AirPort Extreme in terms of disk sharing. The Time Capsule's built in SATA drive offers a slight edge in performance over an external USB disk, but users won't see a significant difference when working from wireless clients. The additional speed is really only visible to wired clients using Gigabit Ethernet.

Time Capsule offers Gigabit Ethernet as standard, while AirPort Extreme units sold prior to August 2007 only supplied 10/100 Fast Ethernet. Even so, the theoretical performance advantage of the faster wired networking isn't a clear reason to upgrade, as the file sharing features of the base stations are optimized for wireless and don't exploit the advantage of the greater throughput potential available in Gigabit Ethernet.

The actual difference in file serving from the base stations between the Fast and Gigabit Ethernet models is not very significant, although client systems connected via the faster Gigabit Ethernet switch integrated into the base station will be much faster when talking to each other, such as when sharing iTunes libraries or iPhoto albums.

To 5 GHz or Not To 5 GHz, That is the Question

All of the currently shipping AirPort base stations now support 802.11n, which includes support for the 5 GHz band. As noted in Exploring Time Capsule: WiFi 802.11n and the 5GHz band, there are both pros and cons to using this configuration. It can limit the reception area and have a harder time penetrating walls and floors, but it also supports the use of wide channels, which can dramatically boost the speed of wireless networking.

This boost can make the difference between a wireless setup that can't quite handle the demands of Time Machine backups while also streaming AirTunes and copying files, and one that takes it all in stride. Users should experiment to make sure they're getting the most out of their equipment given their own circumstances and needs.

Time Machine: Wired vs Wireless Networking vs Directly Connected Drives

Apple advertises Time Capsule as the ideal target for Time Machine backups, and for most users with casual needs, it serves as an ideal backup appliance: invisible, simple, and cost effective. While wireless networking is considerably slower than wired networks and lags far behind backing up to a directly connected USB drive, for most users, the length of time required to do regular incremental background backups won't be a big deal.

Time Capsule


However, wireless restore operations, including the process of zooming into space to look up the missing files in Time Machine, are considerably slower over a wireless connection and incur delays that can make the process something between frustrating and irritating. Because restore operations are a foreground task requiring user interaction, and hopefully will occur less often than hourly backups, this problem can be worked around by connecting to the base station directly via Gigabit Ethernet before performing a restore.

In other words, regular background backups don't suffer from the slower nature of wireless networking nearly as much as the file intensive searching related to a Time Machine restore operation. Restoring files should be an occasional event that can handle the clumsier process of directly connecting to speed things up.

Time Capsule Wireless File Sharing vs a Standalone Gigabit NAS

Given that a PowerMac G5 can serve files over Gigabit Ethernet faster than a directly attached USB drive, it would be nice to see similar performance from Time Capsule. However, Time Capsule and the AirPort Extreme are designed to serve as wireless base stations, not as general purpose, high performance Networked Attached Storage appliances.

Being half as fast as a standalone computer over Gigabit Ethernet also allows Time Capsule to eat a fraction of the energy and dissipate far less heat than a G5 tower, and subsequently be much smaller. The performance edge of a standalone server also becomes invisible when most of the clients are using wireless networking to access it.

Once again, Apple has engineered a product that serves a specific purpose, rather than trying to do everything without doing anything very well. The result is that Time Capsule will satisfy the users it was designed for, and does not appeal to users with needs for something else. For those who do need a solution faster than the entry level base station's integrated file server can manage, there's the option of adding a standalone Gigabit NAS appliance to the network.

A terabyte standalone Gigabit Ethernet NAS device can range from about $300 to $1000, although most lower end systems use two 500 GB disks, making them considerably larger, power hungry, and likely nosier. On the other hand, they should also be significantly faster, and many models offer internal RAID features for additional protection against drive failure. Most devices are also configured over the web, making them more complex for non technical users to manage compared to the ultra simple and friendly AirPort Utility software used to set up Time Capsule and the AirPort Extreme.

On page 2 of 2: Time Capsule Wrap Up and Rating.

Filed under : Current Hardware 20 Comments ] 
Story topics: Time Capsule, AirPort Extreme, Time Machine   Print ] [ Story Link ] 



Mac Poker players can play Full Tilt Poker for Mac and get 100% to $600 free with bonus code MP600, courtesy of Online Poker Mac
AppleInsider Features
Hot Forum Topics

Recent Articles
Steve Jobs teams with Calif. governor to push organ donor registry
Apple begins accepting iPad apps on the App Store
Briefly: Intel short on supply of MacBook Pro-bound processors
China Mobile knocks on Apple's door, seeks preferential treatment
Apple tables push for TV subscriptions on iPad, seeks 99 cent episodes
Apple's iPad secrecy leaves many developers handicapped
Release of Apple's Mac OS X 10.6.3 Update appears imminent
Apple has pre-sold "hundreds of thousands" of iPads
Apple preps 27-inch LED Cinema Display, dodeca-core Mac Pro
Apple director Jerome York passes away
Fascinating motion magazine demo highlights iPad's potential
Confident HTC says no plans to back down from Apple lawsuit
Amazon releases free beta of Kindle for Mac eBook reading software
Apple exploring iPhone audio text message, walkie-talkie feature
Apple director Jerry York in critical condition following collapse
iPhone devs can now automate app release dates, price changes
Apple to ban film-based screen protectors from company stores
Apple adds sharing features, iPad interface tweaks to iWork.com beta
Apple's iMac to account for 25% of global desktop growth in 2010
iPad prompts changes to way magazines count circulation
Apple asks developers to test fonts in latest Mac OS X 10.6.3 beta
NPR, WSJ plan Flash-free Web sites for Apple iPad
'Fake Steve Jobs,' 'Seinfeld' scribe team for Silicon Valley comedy
Apple delays iPad keyboard dock, power adapter until May
First-gen iPhone, Droid sold 8 times better than Nexus One debut
39% of BlackBerry owners say they'd switch to an iPhone
High prices make Apple reluctant to strike longterm NAND flash deals
Apple-Google battle heats up with key hires on both sides
February Mac sales up 43%, Apple on track for 2.9M in quarter
Apple's Steve Jobs gets OK to raze dilapidated mansion
Startup developers represent one in five on Apple's App Store
Microsoft exec says Apple's HTC suit 'is not necessarily a bad thing'
Preorders for Apple iPad slow after 120K first-day rush
NYT: Steve Jobs feels Google betrayed Apple by mimicking iPhone
Apple to replace iPads in need of new battery for $99
Former P.A. Semi chief leaves Apple for chip startup - report
Roughly 10% of Microsoft employees said to be iPhone owners
Apple COO Tim Cook awarded $22 million bonus
iPad: 50,000 sales in 2 hours, Apple TV bumped, mysterious app icon
Tight iPad supply has Apple turning down volume orders for businesses

 
Advertisements








AppleInsider RSS Feed
AppleInsider © 1997-2008
Please review our Privacy Policy.
Written/Edited/Compiled by the AppleInsider Staff.